Had this boyfriend once I lived with who played a concerning number of Dragonball Z video games -- you know, the hybrid fighting/RPG ones. I mean, not that I didn't watch them. Like, a lot, to where whenever I am writing a new blog post, or whenever I'm talking to folks I haven't seen in a long time, I have this urge to go, 'WELL HELLO!' in the voice of Launch.
She was running the shop in one of those games... I think it was Budokai Tenkaichi 3... or maybe it was like, some equipment upgrade station... dang man, I dunno. But when you went in she was all WELL HELLO, and so, yeah. Cred points if any commenters can find a clip of that voice audio for me.
(UPDATE: Here is is! Thank you, OffalAl, for making this for us!)
So. Well, hello -- sorry I've been MIA from SVGL a little bit, but I've taken on some longer-term articles (which, like fruit, will bear slowly, stay tuned!) and had my hands full, and when I'm not doing that, I've been traveling. I'm coming to you live from midnight on Cape Cod, where my parents live.
I was raised here in MA, where summer meant Atlantic Ocean, the cold salted stone that borders it, and all of the shellfish that were dashed on its shores. This time of year, I love to visit whenever I've got time; this weekend we visited the Edward Gorey House, swam on a private beach in Yarmouth, ate lobster (favorite food, if I had to pick) -- working vacation, I suppose.
Personal junk aside, the last time we talked, I had been getting ready to stage the Bad Bitches exhibit's opening at Babycastles' Williamsburg locale, and I am happy to report it went lovely. Motherboard covered the proceedings here, and at Kotaku this month, I used my column to address some of the response to the exhibit and, loosely, the reasons I wanted to stage it.
Related to challenging norms, Brandon Sheffield talks to BioWare Montreal's Manveer Heir (friend of mine; I'm sometimes called "Womanveer") about diversity in game characters, I talk to Metanet's brilliant Mare Sheppard about Toronto's Difference Engine Initiative, and interview Starhawk's senior producer at Sony on inclusiveness.
Finally, my bro Kirk Hamilton (who works at Big K now, whoa) writes on the "Mass Effect beauty pageant" that took place to much controversy on Facebook. As a mixed race woman with pretty non-traditional features I can identify with folks who are tired of media ideals that don't look like them, but how I feel about Blonde FemShep is two things: One, lovely blonde women have probably had enough of being told they can't possibly be smart or admirable, so piss off; and two, please stop saying "FemShep." It drives me crazy.
Or, like, I guess, go ahead. I'm pretty not-into Mass Effect, so you guys have fun. I presume most of you guys like Mass Effect for the same reasons I like Twilight: trope-heavy pair bonding in the environment of beloved fantasy cliches where it's fun to laugh at yourself, or, at the very least, to laugh at yourself while secretly being kind of serious about it. Pair bonding is quintessential. I wrote about it here.
Preceding article has nothing to do with video games, bee-tee-dubs. You know how important I think it is that we enjoy things that have nothing to do with video games. Like music! So if you're on Spotify, please add this 1990S MUSIC PLAYLIST, entitled "liquid television," an enormous 11-hour trip back to an era when flannel wasn't ironic. You're welcome.
[Today's Good Song: Broken Water, 'Peripheral Star']
11 comments:
I'm not sure it's any less annoying than FemShep, but I call her SHEpard because, well, it's right there for you! Too easy.
I really liked the default female Shepard in ME2. I picked her mostly out of laziness (I'm not really into spending much time in the character creator), but I really started to appreciate after a while how, er, homely she looked. That's a slight exaggeration, but all of the female Shepards in the contest look like super models. Feels like a missed opportunity to me. What I thought was a conscious choice on Bioware's part probably was them not investing much time in the default female model. If you played around with the editor you could definitely get someone more conventionally attractive out of it, at least.
(as an aside, a case could be made that in the future easy access to gene manipulation etc. would make a super model look the new "normal", but in the game many actually do not look like that, so how likely is it that this kick-ass warrior also happens to be extremely attractive? (and this should also apply to male Shepard))
"I presume most of you guys like Mass Effect for the same reasons I like Twilight."
Haha! Thank you. This is my favorite thing today :-)
"please stop saying "FemShep." It drives me crazy."
THANK YOU!
I like the new banner. Catherine FTW!
I haven't played any recent titles, due to my 360 being out of commission. I would love to give Catherine some time, along with KOF XIII. Kind of on the waiting game, if the 360 drops in price (maybe?)
Just been replaying some games, on breaks from school work. Enjoy your time out in MA.
You jumped alot of beds in your glory days of past, havent you ?
FemShep, sounds like FemBot from Austin Powers, lol. I like the SHEpard idea!
http://www.gamingdx.blogspot.com
Hey Leigh, is this the game?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdvfaN5ThG4
No. Mass Effect surpasses much of the science fiction canon. It's absurdly fresh and compelling. It's perfect in it's execution as a tight little shooter -- but it could be terrible as a game and I'd still love the characters and the surprisingly nuanced and layered story.
In 25 years, nobody will read Twilight out of anything but nostalgia. It's ugly, unfiltered pathos fred by tired old tropes.
No. Mass Effect surpasses much of the science fiction canon. It's absurdly fresh and compelling. It's perfect in it's execution as a tight little shooter -- but it could be terrible as a game and I'd still love the characters and the surprisingly nuanced and layered story.
In 25 years, nobody will read Twilight out of anything but nostalgia. It's ugly, unfiltered pathos fred by tired old tropes.
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